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The Cromwell Enigma
by
July 1540. The courts of Europe are stunned to hear that Henry VIII has executed his all-powerful minister, Thomas Cromwell.
Poet and classicist Nicholas Bourbon is sent from the cultured court of Queen Marguerite of Navarre to investigate. Thrust into a turbulent world of religious, political and personal rivalries, his travels take him far and wide. He endures perils at s ...more
Poet and classicist Nicholas Bourbon is sent from the cultured court of Queen Marguerite of Navarre to investigate. Thrust into a turbulent world of religious, political and personal rivalries, his travels take him far and wide. He endures perils at s ...more
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Paperback, 352 pages
Published
September 17th 2020
by Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge
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Marguerite, Queen of Navarre hears with great disquiet of the imprisonment of Thomas Cromwell in the Tower of London. She dispatches trusted poet Nicholas Bourbon to England to find out how Henry VIII’s chief advisor has been brought down. By the time Bourbon’s journey is underway, Cromwell is dead, his reputation in tatters and Bishop Stephen Gardiner represents danger to all his supporters. Bourbon realises that whilst Cromwell may be dead his reputation still looms large and he sets out to tr
...more
This was an unusual book, in that the whole story seemed to have no point at all. Nicholas Bourbon, poet and tutor to the daughter of the Queen of Navarre, is sent to England by his patroness to find out about the death of Thomas Cromwell, and old acquaintance. This he accomplishes within a day or so, but instead of returning home, he suddenly takes it into his head to find out more about Thomas Cromwell's background and early history.
After being well acquainted with the man in his lifetime, Bo ...more
After being well acquainted with the man in his lifetime, Bo ...more
At school one of my GCE examination subjects was history. We only has two topics that we looked at in detail: one of these was Tudor history. Of all the fascinating people I can across two really stuck out. One was Sir Francis Walsingham; Elizabeth I’s Spy Master. The other was Thomas Cromwell; Henry VIII’s Chief Minister for many years (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_...). The fact that Cromwell came from Putney, just a few miles from where I was born and lived, added to the interest.
In ...more
In ...more
This Tudor mystery sees Nicholas Bourbon travel to England upon hearing of the fall and imprisonment of Thomas Cromwell. To Bourbon, Cromwell was something of an acquaintance, legend and as the title hints an enigma. Once he learns that Cromwell has in fact died a traitor he can't help but try and uncover the mystery surrounding the man and his younger years.
This book follows the story of something I'm sure many of us would love to do, get to know Cromwell, what motivated him? Was it power? Rel ...more
This book follows the story of something I'm sure many of us would love to do, get to know Cromwell, what motivated him? Was it power? Rel ...more
The synopsis pretty much covers it story-wise.
This reminded me of what I refer to as "in the footsteps of" - wherein an author attempts to walk in the footsteps of their chosen subject to discover more about them and takes the reader along their journey. Usually this type of book is non-fiction, but I find that it works just as well in a fictional format - as it does in this instance.
Utilising the real-life character of Nicholas Bourbon, the reader is taken on a quest to discover the missing yea ...more
This reminded me of what I refer to as "in the footsteps of" - wherein an author attempts to walk in the footsteps of their chosen subject to discover more about them and takes the reader along their journey. Usually this type of book is non-fiction, but I find that it works just as well in a fictional format - as it does in this instance.
Utilising the real-life character of Nicholas Bourbon, the reader is taken on a quest to discover the missing yea ...more
The story of a poet named Nicholas Bourbon who is sent from the court of Queen Marguerite of Navarre to uncover details of the beheading of Thomas Cromwell, formerly an intimate and powerful adviser to King Henry the VIII.
Bourbon must endure sea travel which makes him violently sick, kidnapping by the nefarious "black friars" also known as the Dominican order of monks, meetings with nobles and merchants in England and the Netherlands, sojourns with Englishmen and women who may have information a ...more
Bourbon must endure sea travel which makes him violently sick, kidnapping by the nefarious "black friars" also known as the Dominican order of monks, meetings with nobles and merchants in England and the Netherlands, sojourns with Englishmen and women who may have information a ...more
In 1540 Nicolas Bourbon is sent as Queen Marguerite of Navarre’s secret envoy to find out what has happened to cause Thomas Cromwell’s fall from grace, and what the ripple effects of his execution might be.
At first he feels somewhat ambivalent about his task, but he soon finds himself facing powerful opponents of Cromwell and all he stood for, who are keen to portray him as a dangerous man seeking only to fulfil his own ambitions.
When he is called on to tell others what kind of man Cromwell re ...more
At first he feels somewhat ambivalent about his task, but he soon finds himself facing powerful opponents of Cromwell and all he stood for, who are keen to portray him as a dangerous man seeking only to fulfil his own ambitions.
When he is called on to tell others what kind of man Cromwell re ...more
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Derek Wilson has been a writer of historical fiction and non-fiction for 50 years. His much acclaimed prize-winning works have largely centred on 16th and 17th century Europe. He has used various pen names for his fiction, his current Thomas Treviot Tudor crime series being written under the name D.K. Wilson. The first 2 books in this series - The First Horseman and The Traitor's Mark are based on
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